The External Trade of the Loango Coast 1576-1870:
The Effects of Changing Commercial Relations on the Vili Kingdom of Loango

Phyllis M. Martin

There are two very common misconceptions about African history.
The first is that before the arrival of the Europeans sub-Saharan
Africa was occupied by "primitive" tribes. The second is that a clear
distinction can be made between colonial and precolonial history.
The External Trade of the Loango Coast, an account of a little known
but intriguing part of African history, provides good illustration
of the fallacy of both these ideas. The subject may seem esoteric,
but consider whether a book entitled "English foreign trade 1500-1800"
would be considered at all remarkable.

In the 16th and 17th centuries the Vili kingdom of Loango, situated on
the west coast of Africa between the equator and the mouth of the Congo,
was a powerful centralised state. Its ruler, the Maloango, was able to
impose his own conditions on European traders and played the different
nations (predominantly Portuguese and Dutch) off against one another.
Vili brokers acted as middlemen between African traders and European
ship captains and Vili officials exacted taxes and duties; both made
immense profits. Vili currency (palm cloth) remained in use throughout
the whole of southwest Africa for several centuries.

The trade was initially in luxury goods, with ivory, redwood and copper
being traded for cloth, guns and other manufactures, but the growing
demand for slaves in the New World resulted in the almost completely
domination of the slave trade. The volume of slaves exported from the
Loango coast reached over 15000 per year, and Vili merchants penetrated
far into the African interior in search of new sources. The primary
economic effect of this trade was to create a class of rich nobles whose
wealth did not depend on the Maloango. This resulted in the gradual
collapse of centralised authority and the eventual lapse of the office
of Maloango. So the final demise of the kingdom was due to European
influence, but only indirectly so.